Bootstrap Institute
.
November 13, 2000
America's highest technology award for Doug
Engelbart 2

Douglas Engelbart will
be awarded the 2000 National Medal of
Technology by President Clinton at a black-tie, gala banquet in the
National Building Museum on the evening of Friday, December 1, 2000. It
is the nation's highest award in this category. Other NMT recipients are
Dean Karnen, Donald B. Keck, Robert D. Maurer, Peter Schultz, and the
IBM Corporation. On the same occasion, President Clinton will be
awarding National Medals of Science as well. 2A
Related ceremonies
will include a roundtable discussion
between the Laureates and young people who have demonstrated an aptitude
for science and engineering. This will enable young people to discuss
their interests and solicit guidance from the Laureates, who have
become role models for America's youth and youth around the globe. A
webcast of this event is scheduled for approximately 10:45 a.m.,
November 30. 2B
A press roundtable will be held for both science and technology Laureates in the International Trade Center (Ronald Regan
Building) on December 1 at 10:30 a.m. 2C
November 13, 2000
Award Category & Citation 3
Contribution
Category: General Product & Process Innovation 3A
Citation: For creating the foundations of
personal computing including continuous real-time interaction based on
cathode-ray tube displays and the mouse, hypertext linking, text
editing, on-line journals, shared-screen teleconferencing, and remote
collaborative work. 3B

December 1, 2000: A momentous
pause in the unfinished revolution. Doug Engelbart with President
Clinton in the Oval Room on the occasion of receiving the National Medal
of Technology.*
(Photograph available*.) 3C
November 13, 2000
Doug Engelbart's role in personal and
networked computing
(Brief biography forwarded by the Office of
the U.S. Secretary of Commerce) 4
Dr Engelbart, more than any other single person, set the
stage for that component of the computer revolution now called personal
computing. During the early 1960s, when the hallmark of computing was
large mainframe computers, he correctly saw that a close, interactive,
and continual relationship between a computer and its user would yield
enormous benefit in making that person more efficient and effective. 4A
It was not all vision. During that time he perfected the
notions of on-line, real-time systems that caused machines to deliver to
their users what they wanted when they wanted it, all interactively.
This work came to define the functionality of personal computing even
though some years would pass before the personal computer itself would
be affordable for an individual user. 4B
As Director of a laboratory at Stanford Research Institute
that grew to a staff of 40 to 50 members, he and they created many of
the concepts and tools of personal computing that we take for granted
more than thirty years later. The concepts of point-and-click and
hypertext are just two that have come to define the ease with which we
now interact with computers. Over two dozen of the properties and
capabilities of present computers were demonstrated by the mid-1970s. 4C
As important as these contributions were, they were but
stepping stones toward Dr. Engelbart's ultimate
goal of elevating the competency of an entire organization through the
augmentation of its members through distributed computing systems. Most
of the software innovations were embedded in an integrated groupware
system he called NLS (for on-line system), one of the first interactive
systems anywhere. All this was made possible for the first time at the
Fall Joint Computer Conference in December 1968 in San Fransisco. On a
huge screen at the Conference, he jointly edited a document (two
cursors) with a collaborator 40 miles away at SRI in Menlo Park. 4D
Through video windows on each workstation, the two had a full
personal and computer-based interaction. His conviction about
distributed computer systems led to his group being the second node on
the fledgling ARPANET and later the Internet. His Network Information
Center was the entryway for anyone getting an address for these new
networks for over twenty years. 4E
This early establishment of personal and collaborative
computing helped create a prescription for how computers were to evolve.
These directions included hardware, such as cathode display tubes and
the mouse, which he invented, and network interfaces. They included
software directions such as windowing, hypermedia and hypertext
shared-screen teleconferencing, and, importantly, the concepts and
methods of on-line text and graphics processing. These foundations made
it clear that computers would have this new role of continual, proximal
support for individuals, working either alone or, through networking, as
part of a group. 4F
At least four of Dr. Engelbart's staff transferred to Xerox
Park where bit-map displays, icons, and the desktop metaphor with its
overlapping windows were created. When Steve Jobs of fledgling Apple
Computer saw all this, he understood immediately the ingredients of what
came to be the MacIntosh. SRI issued licences for the mouse to both
Xerox and Apple Computer. 4G
The effects of Moore's Law and this personalized
functionality for computers opened the doors to one of history's most
dramatic growths in human enterprise. That Dr. Engelbart foresaw this
kind of impact is illustrated by this quote from a paper published in
1970: "there will emerge a new
'marketplace,' representing fantastic wealth in commodities of
knowledge, service, information, processing, storage, etc. In
the number and range of transactions, and in the speed and flexibility
with which they are negotiated, this new market will have a
vitality and dynamism as much greater than today's as today's is
greater than the village market." 4H
This anticipation of the way computers should and would
ultimately serve individuals clearly helped establish the primacy of the
United States in the information era and it still enjoys the competitive
advantage of that accelerated growth. 4I
The National Medal of Technology is "to recognize
technological innovators who have made lasting contributions to
enhancing America's competitiveness and standard of living" and whose
solid science results in "commercially successful products and
services." There could be no more apt description of Dr. Engelbart and
his life's work sofar. 4J
[But even so, this editor [vE] can't resist adding that
Doug's vision reaches far beyond the present state of affairs. His
lifelong pursuit has been, and still is, to "as
much as possible, boost mankind's collective capability for coping with
complex, urgent problems." (cf par. 4D) Which is the guiding theme of this site ....] 4K
December 3, 2000
The medal 5
Design for the National Medal of Technology is the work of
medalist and sculptor Mico Kaufman, of North Tewksbury,
Massachusetts. The design was selected from among a handful
submitted by artists in 1984. The three-inch medal is struck in
bronze by the Medallic Art Company of Danbury, Connecticut. 5A
The obverse side of the coin depicts the technologist as
something of a modern "wizard," with a concentrated beam bouncing off
the palm of his hand representing the input and the output of technology
and of the innovation process. Inscribed around the image are the
words "NATIONAL MEDAL OF TECHNOLOGY." 5B
On the reverse is an eagle clutching an olive branch and
arrows, encircled by the inscription "AWARDED BY THE PRESIDENT/OF
THE/UNITED STATES OF AMERICA TO," with a space provided to incribe the
recipient's names. [copy, courtesy U.S.
Department of Commerce] 5C
_____
Footnotes 9
Re National
Medal of Technology. Established by Congress in 1980 as part of
the Stevenson-Wydler Technology Act as a Presidential award, has
recognized 108 individuals and eight companies whose accomplishments
have generated jobs and created a better standard of living. Their
accomplishments best embody technological innovation and support the
advancement of global U.S. competitiveness. Source of photograph: The National Science
& Technology Medals Foundation. 9A
Re photographs
of NMT Award events. - Thanks to Doug your wish is but a click
away. 9B
395 Kb
President Clinton and Douglas Engelbart.
Photograph: courtesy The White House. 9B1
471 Kb
President Clinton, Secretary Mineta, and
NMT Laureates.
Photograph: courtesy The White House. 9B2
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or 1633
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Secretary of Commerce Norman Mineta and
Douglas Engelbart.
Photograph: courtesy National Science & Technology
Medal Foundation. 9B3
Re photo credit. Image from a video clip of
Doug Engelbart's demonstration of his NLS at the 1968 convention of the
Association for Computing Machinery. Clips of the entire, 90-minute
video are found at Stanford University's MouseSite. 9C
Imagine what we can
accomplish together
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